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Statements from Merseyside Police, Counter Terrorism Policing and Lancashire Child Safeguarding Partnership
MERSEYSIDE Police issued the following statement on:- 20 January 2025. The statement reads:- "Today Axel Rudakubana has pleaded guilty to the murders of:- Bebe King, Elsie Dot Stancombe and Alice Da Silva Aguiar, the attempted murders of 8 children and 2 adults. He also pleaded guilty to:- possession of a bladed article in a public place; production of a biological toxin namely ricin, contrary to Section 1 of the Biological Weapons Act 1974; possession of information, namely a PDF file entitled:- ''Military Studies in the Jihad Against the Tyrants: The Al-Qaeda Training Manual'x of a kind likely to be useful to a person committing, or preparing, an act of terrorism, contrary to Section 58 of the Terrorism Act 2000."
Following the Court proceedings Chief Constable Serena Kennedy, said:- "Our thoughts today are with the families of:- Bebe, Elsie, and Alice, along with the children and adults who were injured and seriously traumatised. For the last few weeks, the families have been preparing themselves for a full trial and we can only imagine how difficult that will have been for them. The saving grace from what has happened at Court today is that they will not have to listen to extensive and traumatic evidence, which would have only brought back the horror of what they went through on:- Monday, 29 July 2024, and will live with for the rest of their lives. On that sunny day those gorgeous little girls and their loving families were obliviously unaware of what Axel Rudakubana had planned, they were enjoying a lovely morning, when he struck and ruined the lives of 29 families forever. The investigation team has worked solidly to build up a strong evidential case to provide to the CPS and although we will never know why he did it. What we can say is that he was a man with a unhealthy obsession with extreme violence. We know that he had researched numerous documents online which show that obsession. What we can say is that from all those documents no one ideology was uncovered, and that is why this was not treated as terrorism. During the investigation the team carried out extensive and thorough inquiries and during that time:- • Processed 1655 documents were received and processed through Major Incident Team. • Interviewed 547 witnesses including:- 19 doctors / consultants; 62 North West Ambulance Service personnel and, 10 Merseyside Fire and Rescue Service fire AND rescue officers. • Obtained 405 statements. • Examined 80 pieces of CCTV footage. • Seized 43 devices of which 32 were suitable for download. • Reviewed 159,166 messages. • Recovered 164,394 documents from digital devices. • Recovered a total of 1244 exhibits. Head of Counter Terrorism Policing Matt Jukes, also contributed saying:- "Across Counter Terrorism Policing, the families devastated by Axel Rudakubana’s actions are in our thoughts today. Since the:- 29 July, 2024 our focus has been to support Merseyside Police in their investigation, and secure justice for the victims and their loved ones. Throughout this complex and large scale investigation, we have been relentless in our pursuit of evidence as to why he attacked defenceless children on that day. This has included specialist support in forensic examinations of his home address and digital devices, with witness interviews and intelligence gathering. Despite that we have not been able to identify why he carried out these attacks. Our work with Merseyside Police has uncovered a wide interest in:- conflict, violence, genocide, and terrorism, and that he had accessed a wide range of online material related to these topics. We also know that he had contact with a range of services, and that includes the counter terrorism Prevent system. We can now confirm today that a total of three referrals were made by education providers to the Prevent scheme between:- December 2019 and April 2021. Information about these referrals have not been withheld due to any lack of candour. We have taken advice from the Crown Prosecution Service on what information could be released and when, so as not to risk justice being delivered. Now that Rudakubana has pleaded guilty, it is our commitment to share the details of these referrals and how they were responded to, alongside the examination of his contact with other agencies. The same determination we have shown in the investigation will now be applied to examining how the range of agencies involved with Rudakubana did not come together effectively to identify and deal with the risk he posed. We will be open and determined in pursuing the questions raised by this tragic case, incorporating insights from our wider work." • Children's Social Care undertook an initial assessment and identified social work support was not required, but Early Help was. • Early Help supported Axel and his family around his emotional wellbeing and behaviours. On a separate occasion a carers assessment was undertaken, also resulting in support from Early Help. • He was also referred to the youth justice service due to the incident above. • He was having an autism spectrum disorder assessment which led to him receiving an education and health care plan. • Education services were liaising closely with schools to enable Axel to receive education from an appropriate setting. • He remained open to Child Adolescent Mental Health Services, although he had stopped engaging with the service prior to the incident in February 2023. • Referrals were made to Prevent from agencies.
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